When I read articles from New York Time and other popular news sources I have no trouble understanding the articles. Recently I was suggested about this website aldaily.com. The articles I see here ...

I recently read an essay called "A Law of Acceleration", by Henry Adams. In my personal opinion the author's writing style is over-complicated. I had to read the essay three times to make sense of it.
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I am preparing for an aptitude test and then I came to a question. I need to find the 'tone' of a line that is written below.
John likes work, it fascinates him! He can sit and look at it for hours.
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In English, we read from left-to-right, top-to-bottom.
In traditional Japanese, text is read up-todown, right-to-left.
Is there an English word that describes the "reading strategy" of a particular ...

I'm trying to read "The Nibelungenlied" in metrical English translation by George Henry Needler (http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/etext05/niebn10h.htm). However, I've got certain difficulties with doing ...

Someone was asking for advice about reading only half of the letters in a word. Is there a name for it? Example would be...instead of reading "I won't go there with her" you read "I won go here wit ...

I know the expression 'on (someone's) behalf' usually reads or is understood as 'instead of someone' but I'm wondering if it's possible for it to have a benefactive reading, that is, if it can be used ...

After working on my oral skills in English for a couple of years, I know more interested in learning written English, specially by reading. I have been reading a couple of books over the last months ...

So I just bought this book 'Requiem for a dream' and I just "found out" that there is no quotation mark in the book in a conversation. So it's up to me to tell when the converstation started by who! ...

Let's say there is some number like 12345. In Konglish (Korean English), I can label 3 as the hundred's position number and 5 as the one's position number. I don't think this is correct English. How ...

How to read aloud a sentence like 'In the year 18.. they decided to move to Bricktown'? Such sentences are common especially in Victorian literature.
My only option is 'eighteen and something' but I ...